2017 Winter Poker Open

The 2017 Winter Poker Open went at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino beginning December 7th and concluding December 18th. The six-event series enjoyed attendance increases across the board highlighted by the $1,650 Main Event. The series finale drew 671 entries generating a total prize pool of more than $1,000,000. Scoring the title and $241,651 prize following an outright win was Farid Jattin of Colombia.

Winter Poker Open Main Event champion, Farid Jattin

Here’s a look at each of the series’ six champions as well as links to live reporting logs of each event:

Colombian pro Farid Jattin goes wire-to-wire with the chip lead, records largest first-place score of his career with $241,651 prize.

Tampa, Florida — The Winter Poker Open Main Event at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Tampa, Florida kicked off Thursday, December 14 in the property’s newly-opened, state-of-the-art poker room. The $1,650 buy-in series finale boasted a $500,000 guarantee that was more than doubled by the time 671 entries generated a $1,006,500 prize pool. After the five-day tournament concluded, Colombian pro Farid Jattin claimed the title outright along with a $241,651 score.

“I feel like I put up a really good performance,” Jattin said following the win. “I was really, really focused the whole time […] I ran pretty good, but I felt like I played amazing. I don’t feel like I made any big mistakes.”

Jattin bagged a huge stack in Flight B of the three-flight tournament. He began Day 2 as the only player over the 400,000 mark and claimed the chip lead with the tournament slated to play down to the final 10. The restart lasted the better part of 14 hours as past champion David Bradshaw and John-Christian Templeton hit the rail. By the time the final table was reached, Jattin ended the day just as he started — with a massive advantage.

On the third and final day, Jattin was in front of a tough 10-handed final table that included John Racener, Filipp Khavin, Seminole Hard Rock Poker team member Mike Laake and a slew of Tampa regulars. With 5,500,000 of the 20,000,000 chips in play, it was his tournament to lose and he maneuvered his way to heads-up play busting seven of the tournament’s nine final tablists including the aforementioned Khavin fifth, Racener sixth and Laake ninth. There was but a brief moment at the final table where he relinquished the chip lead to heads-up opponent Witold Wasik before ultimately sealing the deal on the largest first-place payday of his career.

“It was a gift from me to me. It’s my birthday in two days,” Jattin said of his dominant performance. “I thought it was an amazing tournament, well run. The room is amazing and I’ll definitely be coming back.”

Jattin, born in Colombia, is currently 28 years old and has a home in Miami. He spends much of his time traveling South America and was supposed to be in Prague during the Winter Poker Open, but woke up feeling ill on his travel day. He canceled his flight overseas, but still had the urge to play a tournament. A quick glance through the schedules, he stumbled upon the Winter Poker Open and made his way northwest to Tampa.

“Sometimes crazy things happen,” Jattin said of his unscheduled trip to the Tampa property.

The Winter Poker Open enjoyed huge attendance increases across the board. With a $1,006,500 prize pool, the series’ Main Event solidified its spot on the tournament calendar as the event to play before the New Year.

“Obviously it’s a big, big score, but I’m more happy for myself that I finally got the win,” Jattin said. “It’s been a while. I’m there all the time. For the volume that I put in, I’m very, very consistent and I don’t get the wins. I’m just really happy I got the win finally.”

Farid Jattin was on the button and limped. Witold Wasik checked his option and the pair saw a flop.

Flop: — Both players checked.

Turn: — Wasik lead for 500,000 and Jatin called.

River: — Wasik checked. Jattin moved all-in for 9,035,000. Wasik verified both Jattin’s all-in bet as well as his own stack. After Wasik found out he held the chip advantage, he called putting Jattin at risk.

Jattin: for the nuts straightWasik: for two pair

Wasik shipped a monster pot across the table and the pair promptly went on a 15-minute break.

The river fell the and Wasik switched gears, jamming for 4,645,000. Jattin asked for a count, but before it was final announced, “call.” Wasik turned over for a jack-high flush. Jattin’s hand hit the muck and Wasik doubled through the pro to even the stacks.

Action folded around to Scott Caracciolo in the small blind. Satish Surapaneni was quite short stacked in the big and Caracciolo splashed a stack of white 100,000 in the middle putting him all-in. Surapaneni called off in a hurry.

Scott Caracciolo raised to 190,000 and Witold Wasik called from the button. It was no Filipp Khavin in the small and he shoved for 1,100,000 total. John Racener folded his big and Caracciolo got out of the way, too. Wasik called and Khavin was at risk.

Khavin: Wasik:

Runout:

Wasik flopped a pair to take the lead, but couldn’t fade Khavin’s four-flush. Khavin doubled through Wasik.

Farid Jattin opened to 145,000 from late position. Scott Caracciolo called from the cutoff and Kenneth O’Donnell defended the big.

The trio saw a flop of . It checked to Caracciolo and he bet 475,000. O’Donnell got out of the way. Jattin reached into his stack and slid forward enough to Caracciolo all-in. Caracciolo snapped and the hands were up.

Level 28 is underway and there a couple short stacks hanging around during the late action. Filipp Khavin claims 830,000 chips good for 13 big blinds. Satish Surapaneni, meanwhile, has 795,000 also good for 13.

Each of the eight remaining players have locked up $27,679 with the winner pocketing $241,651.